The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
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ebooks ~ What happens to the library?
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Stephanie
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Jan 19, 2012 04:22AM

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Also, although my county's selection of library books is vast, there are still millions of books that we cannot stock. This is where I find my ereader very useful. I can trawl the internet until I find the book I want and then download it to my reader. With the best will in the world, my library is never going to be able to stock everything. If my library has the book I want, then I borrow it from there. If it doesn't then I try and get it electronically.
I'm not overly worried about libraries and their futures.

If I wasn't an English teacher, I'd want to work in a library too :) In fact, I'm still considering a career change...


There are still tons of people that prefer to have a book to an ereader too, and they will rant about the topic so I think regular books are fine. E books cost basically as much, if not more, than a print book anyways. You don't save any money once you factor in the cost of the device and any accessories.
Libraries will never become obsolete. They can be pillars for the community on top of simply being a building for books. Most provide free internet access and help for those in need of guidance for research. They also keep things like encyclopedias and other collections of books that people couldn't afford to buy themselves. They're a relatively free source for knowledge for everyone, especially for those that can't afford consistent internet access.

for me, even with the price of books, the kindle saves me money - by the time I factor in that it wasn't until recently that I had a bookstore near me (after borders closed)...and I had to drive over an hour to get to one - so when I factored the gas in, plus the fact that the price of books in stores is still significantly more than I would pay for the same one on Amazon in print or ebook...




But you are right as to some authors do not bother to print books anymore: they just do the e-publishing which as you Stephanie so rightly said, can be just crappy writting downloading, just ofr the sake of writting.



I absolutely do love the library... with a passion!




I do enjoy Project Gutenberg. I read classics on that site when I'm without much to do at work. In the beginning, it was hard for me to concentrate onthe book on the computer screen, but I am adapting. I guess, like anything else, with the forward motion of the world, libraries will have to move forward as well...

My children LOVE books. I have a 2 and a 4-year-old. They have a nice bookshelf right outside their room that is stocked, almost to the collapsing point, with their favorite picture books. I can't wait for the day when I can start reading them books without pictures and keep their attention! I want them to be able to enjoy the solitude and wonder of the library, like I do. Knowing that all of those books are right there and available to you and anyone else is a wonderful feeling. Books are very expensive and I think the library is the most fantastic idea ever conceived. God bless who ever came up with it!

Oh, and if you like comics a bit, have you ever tried The Dresden Files? Butcher is planning to turn the whole series into a set of graphic novels eventually. There is already one out called Welcome to the Jungle. I just finished it and thought it was pretty good, a bit predictable, but not terrible. I haven't ever read much in the graphic novel genre, so that was a little bit challenging for me... :)

My son is 6 and he likes to hear me tell the stories and then pick up the same book and he "reads" to me.

Thanks for the recommendations. I will have to look up The Dresden files in the local library or bookshop I guess :-). I am actually more of a old school comic book fan. I am currently re reading Tintin which you Americans have been ignoring stubbornly in spite of Speilberg etc. Anyway, graphic novels can be a challenging genre. For me comics are an escape from reality. So I prefer comics to graphic novels which can be a tad disturbing at times.

My new Nook is the Nook Color. I wonder how the graphic novel will work on it.



I don't know how schools can afford NOT to go to e-books. The price of school textbooks are astronomical (and I'm not sure why considering the buying power of our school system.) College textbook are often in excess of $100 a piece. Our knowledge base is also always changing, and books need to be updated. For public schools, we should have a national database where textbook can be dynamically created to match any curriculum. It could be constantly updated (ala wikipedia.) Ultimately, I think it would be significantly less expensive and more effective.

The main problem though is immediate available funding. Schools would have to an abundance in excess to purchase eReaders or laptops for every student and also buy the eBook rights to all the textbooks. They don't have that in surplus. They do have enough, however,to buy a set of textbooks for each content area in rotation. Also, school textbooks are much, much less than college textbooks - around $50-60. If a student damages or loses a textbook, the school is out $50-60 (some families cannot afford to replace) - a student damages or loses a laptop or eReader, the school is out a lot more $$. If companies such as Apple, who are offering a "school" iPod for $499 each even though it costs them around $20 to produce would actually sell their technology to schools at a reasonable rate, more schools probably would advance their technology. It would be a perfect world, though, to have the funding available to switch all schools to the e-textbooks that can be updated with the most current information; however, our country does not fund schools to support this.

I think if you had an accountant get out his adding machine and crunch the numbers on this, the cost savings on this investment would be close to immediate, but what is more important is the improvement it could add to our education system. I think our kids deserve to get more out 12 years of education than a lifetime of back problems from lugging giant out-of-date textbooks around.

I agree that the tools the technology can provide with e-texbooks are great, but as an educator, I know how the budget works. At least in my state, the funding comes in different accounts - general fund, capital outlay, trust funds, etc. The money in each of these accounts can only be used for certain things, which is unfair - why shouldn't a school be able to shift funds around for their needs. If the money is not available in the right account, it's not available, whether or not an accountant crunches numbers and sees the long-term financial gain. If there is not enough at the time in the capital outlay fund, the school is not going to be able to invest in the technology for e-textbooks. I could be wrong for other parts of the US, but in rural SD, this is the case.

my one misgiving with ebooks is i can't lend them on to folk, they have to buy their own copies. so saying e books are so damn cheap that's not really a chore
as for libraries, they will always exist but i can see there being less of them. a large central library rather than smaller town and villiage libraries.




My library, which uses Overdrive as its lender, now accepts Kindle to download! It's a separate file (you have to choose if you want the regular Adobe epub file or the Kindle version). This change has only happened about six months ago, so maybe your library can now support a Kindle?


I tried a Kindle, a Nook and could not take the radiation. So even though they are convenient and I like the idea of being able to enlarge the print to suit my needs, having it's own lighting is a great plus, I was unable to continue their use. The short time I did use e-readers, I liked them. For me, going out to the library is better.


I think the price increases for ebooks are outrageous! They don't have printing, transportation or storage costs and are just being greedy. Thankfully, there is a growing independent publishing industry out there with books the stuffy established houses daren't take a risk on, with fairer pricing. The problem is sorting the gems from the dross.

I resisted getting an e-reader but, like you, I prefer it to paper now. Libraries will have to move with the times to stay alive. In some places you can borrow e-books from the library. Here in England they run events and support readers' & writers' groups, provide newspapers, computers & internet access, lend music and films.

That's too bad! Even though I have a Nook, I end up reading more printed books anyway. If there's a book I want to read but the library does not have it as an eBook, I get it in the print format. I would be sad to lose our library - my daughters and I have a lot of fun getting books for them, going to library events, participating in the summer reading program for kids, etc.

But -- the important thing is content. I love the feel of a book with real paper in my hand -- and flipping back and forth through the pages as I desire. I also love listening to some books on audible -- Water for Elephants was fabulous this way. And now I love the convenience of an ereader -- checking out books from a library without using gasoline or time. But still enjoying the experience of library visits and bookstore visits.
There was a great NPR story about the Brooklyn (NYC) Public Library -- and how they are embracing ebooks as a way to continue to offer content to the public. They currently check out, and check in 70,000 books a day. The concept of physically doing this, and the cost of doing this, suggests that ebooks may be a great supplemental way for libraries to serve their mission and also be financially secure for the future.

The Kindle Touch is primarily for during my lunch hour, appointments, and travel. This is because I can carry a lot of reading with me without having to worry about weight, or not having something to read when I finish one.
I still go to the library, and read the hard cover books. These are mostly the new releases of my favorite authors.
I think libraries are here to stay, at least I hope so.



First the practical side - Millions upon millions of books are available via the library system for free. So first the library will NEVER go away, but how we use it is definitely evolving. You check out books online, you can download them or download audio books. All with an electronic device. But right now the library system has a limited # of titles available via this method. Probably less than 1% of the covers they offer via paper. EVENTUALLY I do see paper disappearing and this is more of a "green" effect, paper usage harms the envirnment so I see this going away eventually. Even if the library itself is probably the best recycler developed in several centuries.
I still enjoy paper, but when I travel, have an appointment where I need to sit and wait. Having hundreds of books on my eReader makes the time fly with only .5 lbs of weight added to my purse.
BTW I use all book media available - Audio Book, eBooks and Paper (I VERY rarely buy books now after decades of purchasing). Because of the library's ability to act more like shopping on amazon, I browse, select and I don't pay shipping because I pick up ... lol.

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